Dickie Kasha, Micklesfield Lisa K, Chantler Sarah, Lambert Estelle V, Goedecke Julia H
UCT/MRC Research Unit for Exercise Science and Sports Medicine, Department of Human Biology, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa.
BMC Public Health. 2014 May 23;14:498. doi: 10.1186/1471-2458-14-498.
Low levels of physical activity (PA) have been associated with increased risk for cardiovascular disease (CVD) and type 2 diabetes (T2D), but few studies have examined whether meeting international PA guidelines is associated with reduced risk in a black South African (SA) population. The aims of this study were to compare body composition and cardio-metabolic risk factors for CVD and T2D between active and inactive groups (part 1, cross-sectional analysis) and, to determine whether PA level predicts changes in body composition and cardio-metabolic risk factors for CVD and T2D at follow-up after 5.5-years (part 2, longitudinal analysis).
Part 1 included a sample of 240 apparently healthy black SA women (26 ± 7 years) who underwent the following measurements at baseline: PA (Global Physical Activity Questionnaire (GPAQ)), body composition and regional fat distribution (dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry and computerised tomography), blood pressure, fasting glucose, insulin and lipid concentrations. For part 2, a sub-sample of women (n = 57) underwent the same measurements after a 5.5-year period.
At baseline, 61% of women were classified as meeting the guidelines for moderate- to vigorous-intensity physical activity (MVPA) according to GPAQ. Women who were active had significantly lower body weight (p < 0.001), body fat (BMI, fat mass, % body fat, waist circumference, central and appendicular fat mass, all p < 0.001), and measures of insulin resistance (fasting serum insulin and HOMA-IR, both p = 0.01), and higher high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (p = 0.041), compared to the inactive group. At follow-up, all body fat measures increased significantly in both groups and diastolic blood pressure decreased significantly in those who were active at baseline, but did not change in those who were inactive.
Meeting PA guidelines was associated with decreased risk for CVD and T2D in black SA women, but did not prevent the increase in body fat over time. Interventions promoting physical activity to specifically address obesity in this high-risk group are recommended.
低水平的身体活动(PA)与心血管疾病(CVD)和2型糖尿病(T2D)风险增加相关,但很少有研究探讨达到国际身体活动指南是否与南非黑人(SA)人群风险降低有关。本研究的目的是比较活跃组和不活跃组之间的身体成分以及CVD和T2D的心血管代谢风险因素(第1部分,横断面分析),并确定身体活动水平是否能预测5.5年后随访时身体成分以及CVD和T2D的心血管代谢风险因素的变化(第2部分,纵向分析)。
第1部分纳入了240名表面健康的南非黑人女性样本(26±7岁),她们在基线时接受了以下测量:身体活动(全球身体活动问卷(GPAQ))、身体成分和局部脂肪分布(双能X线吸收法和计算机断层扫描)、血压、空腹血糖、胰岛素和血脂浓度。对于第2部分,一组女性子样本(n = 57)在5.5年后接受了相同的测量。
在基线时,根据GPAQ,61%的女性被归类为达到中度至剧烈强度身体活动(MVPA)指南。与不活跃组相比,活跃女性的体重(p < 0.001)、体脂(BMI、脂肪量、体脂百分比、腰围、中心和附属脂肪量,均p < 0.001)以及胰岛素抵抗指标(空腹血清胰岛素和HOMA-IR,均p = 0.01)显著更低,高密度脂蛋白胆固醇更高(p = 0.041)。在随访时,两组的所有体脂测量值均显著增加,基线时活跃的女性舒张压显著下降,而不活跃的女性则无变化。
达到身体活动指南与南非黑人女性CVD和T2D风险降低相关,但不能预防随时间推移体脂的增加。建议采取促进身体活动的干预措施,以专门解决这一高危人群的肥胖问题。